Synopses & Reviews
From the Foreword:
"Without a doubt, the single area in which practicing clinicians lack current and clinically relevant training and information is genetics, and more specifically the role of genetics in communicative disorders. Over the past 15 years, I have noted this to be the case in my interactions with audiences throughout the United States and around the world. The question I regularly receive from practicing clinicians is 'Can you help me find a readable book on genetics, one that contains information that I can put into practice right away?' Up to this time, there was no single source I could refer them to. You now hold the answer in your hands. Clinically relevant, empirically sound, and eminently readable is how I would describe the information contained in the Handbook of Genetic Communicative Disorders."
Louis Rossetti, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Handbook of Genetic Communicative Disorders is the only book to consider the genetics of communicative disorders from a broad perspective. It examines genetics, embryology, and epidemiology, along with the study of hearing, speech, and language disorders. It also introduces a review of issues relevant to genetic counseling and ethics. It is a unique and comprehensive work edited by a master clinician and filled with articles written by contributors who are the leading experts in their respective disciplines.
About the Editor
Dr. Sanford E. Gerber is an adjunct professor of speech and hearing sciences at Washington State University, Pullman. He is also an emeritus professor of speech and hearing sciences at the University of California, Santa Barbara and a former visiting professor in the department of communication disorders at Eastern Washington University, Cheney. Dr. Gerber has received a variety of awards over the years, most notably, a diploma "honoris causa" from the Bohemian Medical Association J.E. Purkyne, and he is a correspondiente extranjero of the Mexican Society of Audiology and Phoniatrics. Dr. Gerber is the author or editor of 13 books and more than 150 journal articles, most of them dealing with communication in the very youngest people. He has lectured in numerous countries, among them The Netherlands, England, Mexico, Costa Rica, Argentina, and Ecuador.
Review
"This is an excellent book to help clinicians understand some of the concepts involved in genetic research. The melding of basic science and clinical information, and the inclusion of a wide variety of communication disorders, makes this book unique among those covering genetics.
Four Stars!"
'"DOODY'S
"This work will be useful in health libraries and the health collections of academic libraries. This information is readable and current and all essays include extensive lists of references along with the work's concluding bibliography."
'"AMERICAN REFERENCE BOOKS ANNUAL
Review
will be useful in health libraries and the health collections of academic libraries. This information is readable and current and all essays include extensive lists of references along with the work's concluding bibliography."
AMERICAN REFERENCE BOOKS ANNUAL
Review
l essays include extensive lists of references along with the work's concluding bibliography."
AMERICAN REFERENCE BOOKS ANNUAL
Review
, makes this book unique among those covering genetics.
Four Stars!"
DOODY'S
"This work will be useful in health libraries and the health collections of academic libraries. This information is readable and current and all essays include extensive lists of references along with the work's concluding bibliography."
AMERICAN REFERENCE BOOKS ANNUAL
Synopsis
Many professionals in the communicative sciences are relative newcomers to the understanding of genetics as it applies to communicative disorders. A speech-language clinician certainly can diagnose and treat stuttering, for example, but that clinician may not be fully aware of the role of a genetic counselor for the family of a stutterer. An audiologist may be able to assess a hearing impairment, but an understanding of the underlying genetics of that impairment would make that person a better audiologist. The medical geneticist, similarly, could have an inadequate appreciation of how our genes may affect language function. All of these professionals need a source that brings together essential ideas from related disciplines.
This is a book about human communication, both normal and disordered, and how our communication abilities are affected by our genes. Many, probably most, communicative disorders are of genetic origin, even if not exclusively genetic. A knowledge of genetics, therefore, is essential to our understanding of communication, of communicative disorders, of how such disorders come about, and of how to deal with them.
This is the only book to consider the genetics of communicative disorders from a broad perspective. It examines genetics, embryology, and epidemiology, along with study of the hearing, speech, and language disorders themselves. It also introduces review of issues relevant to genetic counseling and ethics. It is a unique and comprehensive work whose contributors are the leading experts in their respective disciplines.
* Only book available to consider all communicative disorders
* Unparalleled scrutiny of the sciences basic to the genetics of communicative disorders
* Specific attention paid to clinical and ethical issues
Synopsis
E. Gerber is an adjunct professor of speech and hearing sciences at Washington State University, Pullman. He is also an emeritus professor of speech and hearing sciences at the University of California, Santa Barbara and a former visiting professor in the department of communication disorders at Eastern Washington University, Cheney. Dr. Gerber has received a variety of awards over the years, most notably, a diploma "honoris causa" from the Bohemian Medical Association J.E. Purkyne, and he is a correspondiente extranjero of the Mexican Society of Audiology and Phoniatrics. Dr. Gerber is the author or editor of 13 books and more than 150 journal articles, most of them dealing with communication in the very youngest people. He has lectured in numerous countries, among them The Netherlands, England, Mexico, Costa Rica, Argentina, and Ecuador.
Synopsis
extranjero of the Mexican Society of Audiology and Phoniatrics. Dr. Gerber is the author or editor of 13 books and more than 150 journal articles, most of them dealing with communication in the very youngest people. He has lectured in numerous countries, among them The Netherlands, England, Mexico, Costa Rica, Argentina, and Ecuador.
Synopsis
sor in the department of communication disorders at Eastern Washington University, Cheney. Dr. Gerber has received a variety of awards over the years, most notably, a diploma "honoris causa" from the Bohemian Medical Association J.E. Purkyne, and he is a correspondiente extranjero of the Mexican Society of Audiology and Phoniatrics. Dr. Gerber is the author or editor of 13 books and more than 150 journal articles, most of them dealing with communication in the very youngest people. He has lectured in numerous countries, among them The Netherlands, England, Mexico, Costa Rica, Argentina, and Ecuador.
About the Author
Dr. Sanford E. Gerber a is visiting professor in the Department of Communication Disorders at Eastern Washington University. He is also an adjunct professor of speech and hearing sciences at Washington State University and an emeritus professor of speech and hearing sciences at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Gerber is the author or editor of 13 books and more than 150 journal articles, most of them dealing with communication in the very youngest people. He has lectured in numerous countries, among them The Netherlands, England, Mexico, Costa Rica, Argentina, and Ecuador.
Table of Contents
omponents of Communicative Disorders.
S.E. Stool, Prenatal and Post-natal Craniofacial Development.
D. Frenz, J. Represa, And T.R. Van De Water, Morphogenesis and Genetics of Inner Ear Development and Malformation.
R.J. Ruben, Genetic Deafness.
J. Williams and J. Stevenson, Genetic Language Disorders.
R.J. Shprintzen, Genetics in Craniofacial Disorders and Clefting: Then and Now.
S. Felsenfeld and D. Drayna, Stuttering and Genetics: Our Past and Our Future.
J.W. Gilger, Concepts in Behavioral Genetics and Their Application to Developmental and Learning Disorders.
S. Davis, Genetic Knowledge About Communicative Disorders: Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications.
S.E. Gerber, Treatment and Prevention.
References.
Author Index.
Subject Index.